Frustration
overcomes Woods at Masters
by EDDIE PELLS, Associated Press

AFP Photo
Tiger Woods had four
bogeys and a double bogey Saturday. |
AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) -- There were
moments when Tiger Woods looked like he had never played at the
Masters, let alone won it three times.
Errant drives, off-target
approaches and, most notably, a few unfathomable reads on the
greens turned the third round at Augusta National into a mess for
Woods. He shot 3-over-par 75 and wound up at 3-over, tied for 20th
place, nine shots behind leaders Phil Mickelson and Chris DiMarco.
It's folly, of course, to count
Woods completely out of any tournament, no matter what the
deficit. But after Saturday, it's hard to imagine him being fitted
for a fourth green jacket.
``I'm very close to putting it
altogether,'' he said, repeating a mantra he's used all year. ``I
made absolutely nothing today. If I make a few and put the ball in
the fairway tomorrow -- I have 18 chances at it -- hopefully, I'll
putt better than I did today.''
Officially, he needed 30 putts on
Saturday, but that number doesn't tell the whole story.
The most telling episode came on
the eighth green. Woods spent a full three minutes circling it,
checking out angles and debating with his caddie, Steve Williams,
about the 70-foot putt from the fringe he needed to roll over a
large hump and down toward the hole.
The extra time didn't pay off.
Woods hit the ball straight across the green, hoping it would
reach the top of the hill and feed down. But it got to the top and
stopped, leaving him 35 feet from the hole, in need of a tough
two-putt for par.
He called it bad luck, in that he
didn't hit the approach another foot or two. He also conceded he
was bamboozled by the first putt, a surprising statement from a
player who has mastered this course during the past seven years.
``I had absolutely no chance at
it,'' he said. ``I didn't know whether it was going to go left or
going to go right. That's how it goes.''
It also went bad on No. 14, the
most heavily contoured green on the course. Woods hit his approach
shot well short, and on the right fringe. By that time, he was
hurrying things a bit and it showed. Trying to get the ball near
the hole at the back left, Woods putted up a hill that resembled a
buried elephant, only to watch it take a U-turn and come back down
the other side, stopping almost as far from the cup as it began.
He made bogey there to move to
5-over, and by then, the huge gallery that followed him to begin
the day had thinned considerably. Those who stayed weren't so
nice.
``C'mon, Jay. Show Tiger how it's
done,'' one fan yelled as Woods and playing partner Jay Haas
approached the 15th tee.
``We all know he's the kind of
guy who can come out here and shoot 65,'' Haas said. ``If he comes
out and things start clicking for him, he can pull it off.''
Indeed, Woods shot 69 on Friday
to get back into the tournament.
But if the Woods who carded 75s
on both Thursday and Saturday reappears, he'll be playing for a
paycheck, and not much else.
Other third-round lowlights
included:
- A drive into the right bunker
on No. 1, en route to bogey.
- A missed 4-footer that would
have saved par on No. 9.
- A miscalculated shot on No. 12
-- the short par-3 -- that went behind the green, forcing him to
scramble for par.
- A drive on No. 13 that
pinballed around in the woods, leaving him with an awkward
punch-out that clipped another tree before rolling across the
fairway. He hit his third shot -- ``a beautiful 5-iron,'' he
called it -- that hit the top of the hill on back of the green and
barely trickled into a bunker. After overcooking the sand shot, he
needed three putts to make double bogey.
``It's frustrating, because I'm
so close,'' Woods said.
He kept in range with two birdies
over the last four holes. Always an optimist, he was counting on
some windy, wicked weather Sunday to equalize things and give him
a chance.
He'll need that kind of help,
plus a collapse from his opponents, plus a boost in his game.
``As we know, anything can
happen,'' he insisted. ``I just want to come out and play well.''
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